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If you think this is the area where you tell everyone you are sorry for eating their lunch out of the fridge, it probably isn't the place for you


This forum is open discussion between atheists and all theists to defend and debate their views on religion or non-religion. Please respect that this is a Christian-owned forum and refrain from gratuitous blasphemy. VERY wide leeway is given in range of expression and allowable behavior as compared to other areas of the forum, and moderation is not overly involved unless necessary. Please keep this in mind. Atheists who wish to interact with theists in a way that does not seek to undermine theistic faith may participate in the World Religions Department. Non-debate question and answers and mild and less confrontational discussions can take place in General Theistics.


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  • Tassman
    replied
    Originally posted by Sparko View Post
    I love how you like to use the bible as long as you think you can make a point with it, but as soon as we tell you how wrong you are, you go "well it's all made up anyway!"

    Leave a comment:


  • JimL
    replied
    Originally posted by Sparko View Post
    Who said anything about eye witnesses? His point was trying to say that the bible is fiction so what it says about the trinity doesn't matter. It is just another hand-waving technique.
    He didn't say anything about what was in the gospels other than that it was written decades later by non-eyewitnesses and that the notion of the trinity didn't emerge until long after that. But regardless of how it came about, it's still an illogical concept, and so a false claim!

    Leave a comment:


  • Sparko
    replied
    Originally posted by JimL View Post
    He didn't, he used the bible to make clear to you that the authors thereof couldn't have been eye witnesses, because the gosples weren't written for many decades after the claimed events supposedly took place. In other words, "it's all made up anyways."
    Who said anything about eye witnesses? His point was trying to say that the bible is fiction so what it says about the trinity doesn't matter. It is just another hand-waving technique.

    Leave a comment:


  • mossrose
    replied
    Originally posted by JimL View Post
    He didn't, he used the bible to make clear to you that the authors thereof couldn't have been eye witnesses, because the gosples weren't written for many decades after the claimed events supposedly took place. In other words, "it's all made up anyways."

    Gospels.

    Leave a comment:


  • JimL
    replied
    Originally posted by Sparko View Post
    I love how you like to use the bible as long as you think you can make a point with it, but as soon as we tell you how wrong you are, you go "well it's all made up anyway!"
    He didn't, he used the bible to make clear to you that the authors thereof couldn't have been eye witnesses, because the gosples weren't written for many decades after the claimed events supposedly took place. In other words, "it's all made up anyways."

    Leave a comment:


  • Sparko
    replied
    Originally posted by Tassman View Post
    "John and the other Apostles" did not know Jesus at all. The gospel narratives were written many decades after the events by non-eyewitnesses who had heard stories in circulation. The notion of the Holy Trinity only emerged slowly among people who wanted to say that Jesus was God, as did the doctrine of the hypostatic union between 'God the Father' and 'God the Son'. Neither doctrine was definitively spelt out until the Ecumenical Councils many centuries later.
    I love how you like to use the bible as long as you think you can make a point with it, but as soon as we tell you how wrong you are, you go "well it's all made up anyway!"

    Leave a comment:


  • Tassman
    replied
    Originally posted by 37818 View Post
    What was the circular argument? The problem has to do with what God's identity happens to be. And I will argue God is God - you do not want God to be God. I am using my understanding as to Whom God Is.
    Again, reality is defined by God
    God's identity being the uncaused reality.
    This is merely another faith statement; it is not supported by substantive evidence.

    To quote the Apostle Paul regarding the Christian view of God, "In Him we live and move and have our existence."
    This is yet another faith statement; it is not supported by evidence. What would Paul know?

    Leave a comment:


  • Tassman
    replied
    Originally posted by Sparko View Post
    It only takes a couple of verses to get the basic concept. I quoted them in my article previously. It is obvious that John and the other Apostles knew that Jesus was God and that there was only one God and that Jesus wasn't the Father.

    The bible isn't a text book. You can't just look up Trinity in the index and expect to find a concise definition.
    "John and the other Apostles" did not know Jesus at all. The gospel narratives were written many decades after the events by non-eyewitnesses who had heard stories in circulation. The notion of the Holy Trinity only emerged slowly among people who wanted to say that Jesus was God, as did the doctrine of the hypostatic union between 'God the Father' and 'God the Son'. Neither doctrine was definitively spelt out until the Ecumenical Councils many centuries later.
    Last edited by Tassman; 05-10-2018, 11:40 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • 37818
    replied
    Originally posted by Doug Shaver View Post
    And whose fault is that? The only clues I can have are those provided by people who say he exists. I am an atheist because theists cannot give me a good reason to believe anything they say about God.
    God has an identity. Christians know God (noting Jesus' prayer of knowing God and Jesus Himself whom God sent) by whom Christians know they have eternal life, and cannot ever truly deny it.

    Leave a comment:


  • 37818
    replied
    Originally posted by Tassman View Post
    This is a circular argument fallacy.
    What was the circular argument? The problem has to do with what God's identity happens to be. And I will argue God is God - you do not want God to be God. I am using my understanding as to Whom God Is.


    I do. Gods are human creations and do not have an independent reality.
    Again, reality is defined by God - God's identity being the uncaused reality. To quote the Apostle Paul regarding the Christian view of God, "In Him we live and move and have our existence."

    Leave a comment:


  • Sparko
    replied
    It only takes a couple of verses to get the basic concept. I quoted them in my article previously. It is obvious that John and the other Apostles knew that Jesus was God and that there was only one God and that Jesus wasn't the Father.

    The bible isn't a text book. You can't just look up Trinity in the index and expect to find a concise definition.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tassman
    replied
    Originally posted by 37818 View Post
    Two things to note. One, the identity of who and what is God. Second, substantive evidence is in fact based on what God is. What needs evidence is not God. Else what ever god you think your are referring to is not God.
    This is a circular argument fallacy.

    Then you have no clue as to what is God.
    I do. Gods are human creations and do not have an independent reality.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tassman
    replied
    Originally posted by Sparko View Post
    So you have given up trying to claim I am a modalist?
    I believe that you fell into the Modalist heresy in trying to support the Trinity. But, my main concern was to emphasise the inherent ridiculousness of the doctrine. The same applies to the doctrine of the hypostatic union, whereby Jesus was simultaneously fully god and fully man.

    Originally posted by Sparko View Post
    You keep moving the goal posts. We are not giving you a logical argument for the existence of God, just that the bible teaches that God is a Trinity and that it is a logical argument and is not contradictory. You don't have to believe in God or that he is a Trinity.

    there is no logical contradiction in the concept of the Trinity.

    If you wish to try to prove that there is one, please do. Merely asserting that it is illogical, or moving the goal posts is not an argument.

    Leave a comment:


  • Doug Shaver
    replied
    Originally posted by 37818 View Post
    you have no clue as to what is God.
    And whose fault is that? The only clues I can have are those provided by people who say he exists. I am an atheist because theists cannot give me a good reason to believe anything they say about God.

    Leave a comment:


  • 37818
    replied
    Originally posted by JimL View Post
    Yes they are, but you are not making one, you're simply stating your belief such as: "Again, God is invisible and omnipresent."
    I am describing God. Whom you do not believe.

    No one knows anything without belief.

    You have some kind of belief about the God you deny.

    Leave a comment:

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